This is actually a real estate value website. The reason that I am posting it as a learning object is because it can be used...
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This is actually a real estate value website. The reason that I am posting it as a learning object is because it can be used to collect meaningful data (a student's home value). When one home's value is included in a collection of the homes in the neighborhood, we have a possible mean, median, mode, and range lesson. Students love this because they can choose their neighborhood, a friend's, or even grandma's neighborhood to collect and complete statistics problems using the real (and even personally relevant) data!

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This simple simulation should give you a better feel of the trade-offs which policy makers need to make in creating federal...
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This simple simulation should give you a better feel of the trade-offs which policy makers need to make in creating federal budgets and dealing with deficits.This simulation asks you to adjust spending and tax expenditures in the the 2006 budget proposed by the White House in order to achieve either a balanced budget or any other target deficit. In order to make the choices we face in the budget clearer, we assume that you make the adjustments all in one year.According to the Congressional Budget Office, the 2006 fiscal deficit is projected to be $296 billion. This does not include the costs of the Iraq War, so in the simulation the deficit has been increased by $105 billion, the costs of the supplemental appropriations for Iraq and Afghanistan operation for fiscal 2005, for a total projected deficit of $401 billion. These costs and the associated deficits can be adjusted in the similuation based on your estimates of the likely continuing costs of the war or whether to scale back or end those operations.The Simulation also allows you to adjust the costs of the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, either cutting or cancelling them to raise revenue, or increasing them to create larger tax cuts. It also allows you to increase or decrease tax expenditures, also known as tax deductions, credits or "loopholes.״

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There are two types of flying machines that allow for lift to overcome gravity. The first type, called the aerodynamic...
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There are two types of flying machines that allow for lift to overcome gravity. The first type, called the aerodynamic machines such as helicopters and airplanes, rely on thrust and forward speed to produce lift. The second type, aerostatic machines, such as hot air balloons and lighter than air-type craft, rely on the differences in air density for lift.This lesson is concerned with the second type, the type that are dependent on buoyancy.

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A fluid is a substance that flows easily. Gases and liquids are fluids, although sometimes the dividing line between liquids...
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A fluid is a substance that flows easily. Gases and liquids are fluids, although sometimes the dividing line between liquids and solids is not always clear. Because of their ability to flow, fluids can exert buoyant forces, multiply forces in a hydraulic systems, allow aircraft to fly and ships to float.

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Hydraulic systems use a incompressible fluid, such as oil or water, to transmit forces from one location to another within...
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Hydraulic systems use a incompressible fluid, such as oil or water, to transmit forces from one location to another within the fluid. Most aircraft use hydraulics in the braking systems and landing gear. Pneumatic systems use compressible fluid, such as air, in their operation. Some aircraft utilize pneumatic systems for their brakes, landing gear and movement of flaps.

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